“Could you repeat the question?” As I discussed in a Washington Post op-ed more than 10 years ago, that used to be the most common response from my law students at Georgetown University. It was inevitably asked while the student, called upon for a response in the Socratic method that I, like most law professors, use, glanced up from the laptop screen that otherwise occupied his or her field of vision. After I repeated the question, the student’s gaze, as often as not, returned to the computer screen, as if the answer might appear there. Who knows? With instant messaging, maybe it would?
Some years back, our law school, like many universities, high schools, and even grade schools around the country, wired its classrooms with Internet hookups. It’s the way of the future, I was told. Now we have a wireless campus, and incoming students are required to have laptops. So my first-year students are more than a bit surprised when I tell them that laptops are banned from my classroom.
I ban laptops for two reasons. Note-taking on a laptop encourages verbatim transcription. The note-taker tends to go into stenographic mode and no longer processes information in an active way that is conducive to the give-and-take of classroom discussion. Because taking notes the old-fashioned way, by hand, is so much slower, the student actually has to listen, think, and prioritize the most important themes. Of course, if one’s idea of a lecture is a process by which the notes of the teacher get transferred to the notes of the student without passing through the brain of either, then laptops may be the perfect transcribing tools. But if the goal is an interactive classroom, I find that laptops just get in the way.
Studies have found that students who take notes by hand retain the information communicated more effectively than those who transcribe it on a computer. One study gave students the same videotaped lecture and had half the students take notes by hand, the other half by computer. (The computers had no Internet access, so there was no issue of distraction.) Those who took notes by hand performed markedly better on a test administered shortly afterward.
But, of course, most laptops are connected to the Internet. And, as such, they create a temptation to do the many other things one can do there—surf the Web, check e-mail, shop for shoes, play solitaire, or review Instagram and Facebook. That’s not only distracting to the student who is checking baseball scores and statistics but for all those who see him and many others doing something besides being involved in class. It also takes the student out of the classroom discussion, which itself has collective costs for the learning environment as a whole. (In deference to the modern era, I permit two volunteers each class to use laptops to take notes that are then made available to all students—online, of course.)
[Howard Rheingold explains how anyone can thrive in an information age.]
When I initially raised with my colleagues the idea of cutting off laptop access, some accused me of being paternalistic, authoritarian, or worse. We daydreamed and did crosswords when we were students, they argue, so how can we prohibit our students, who are adults, after all, from using their time in class as they deem fit?
A crossword hidden under a book is one thing. But with the aid of Microsoft and Google, we have effectively put at every seat a library of magazines, a television, and the opportunity for real-time side conversations and invited our students to check out whenever they find their attention wandering.
This essay was originally published in 2018 in Encyclopædia Britannica Anniversary Edition: 250 Years of Excellence (1768–2018).